Episodios

  • Asking Seven Forbidden Questions
    Nov 27 2025

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    A worship leader ready to resign, a heart full of envy, and a sanctuary that changes everything—Psalm 73 reads like a journal entry we were never supposed to see. We walk with Asaph as he watches the ungodly thrive in wealth, ease, health, and status, and he dares to ask the questions many of us hide: Why do those who ignore God seem to get the best of life? Does faithfulness really pay off when my road is rough and theirs looks smooth?

    We set the scene for Book III of the Psalter and reintroduce Asaph, the Levite musician appointed by David, whose honesty cuts through clichés. He catalogs the tensions: prosperity without piety, blasphemy rewarded with applause, and the sting of daily conviction that makes godliness feel costly. Then comes the hinge. Rather than slip away, Asaph steps into the sanctuary of God. That move doesn’t magically fix circumstances, but it reframes them. Worship expands his horizon beyond snapshots to the whole story, reminding us that apparent success can sit on shaky ground and that discipline is a mercy, not a penalty.

    Across the conversation, we explore how envy narrows vision, how public candor requires pastoral wisdom, and how sacred space—Scripture, gathered worship, quiet prayer—reorders what we value. The takeaway is both sturdy and hopeful: honesty belongs with God, perspective lives in his presence, and the path steadies when we trade comparison for communion. If you’ve felt the ache of unfairness or the pull to give up, you’ll find language for your struggle and a next step toward clarity.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs perspective, and leave a review so others can find these conversations.

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    12 m
  • Walking With God Through Life
    Nov 26 2025

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    When prayer is urgent and the clock seems cruel, what do we say, and how do we trust? We dive into Psalms 70–72 to explore the arc from “Make haste, O God” to gray-haired praise and a father’s blessing that outlives a crown. The journey begins with David’s short, desperate cry that proves sincerity matters more than length. It then widens into a lifetime of faith where dependence becomes a mission: telling God’s might to another generation. Finally, it lands in a royal prayer from David for Solomon, a blueprint for leadership marked by justice, compassion for the poor, and the refreshing gentleness of rain on mown grass.

    We share two striking testimonies—one of sudden rescue after years of wandering, another of steady faith kept for six decades—to show how God both saves and keeps. Along the way, we challenge a quiet trend in many churches: the temptation for older believers to step back. Psalm 71 won’t let us retire from influence. Instead, it calls us to mentor, teach, and hand off not just tasks but a story of God’s faithfulness. We also reflect on the power of written blessings—letters to adult children that carry courage, clarity, and joy—because words can become a legacy that steadies hearts long after we’re gone.

    This conversation blends biblical insight with practical steps: pray simply and honestly when life hits hard, cultivate rhythms that carry faith across decades, and speak life into the next generation with intentional, encouraging words. We close with the doxology that frames it all: “Blessed be God’s glorious name forever.” If you’re seeking guidance for urgent prayer, long obedience, or parenting and mentorship that leave a mark, you’ll find a path here. Listen, share with a friend who needs courage today, and if this encouraged you, subscribe and leave a review to help others find the show.

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    12 m
  • A Closer Look at the Sufferings of Christ
    Nov 25 2025

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    What if a single psalm could chart both the facts of Jesus’ suffering and the feelings he carried through it? We walk through Psalm 69 as more than David’s lament, uncovering how it points to the Messiah with surprising precision and deep compassion. From the “deep mire” image to the ache of being a stranger to his brothers, we connect Old Testament prophecy to New Testament fulfillment and to the realities many of us live today.

    We explore the gritty heart of substitution: Jesus did not stumble into our mess; he stepped into it for us. Drawing on 1 Peter 2:24 and 2 Corinthians 5:21, we consider how the cross deals with every hidden thought and every public failure, and why this is not just a legal exchange but an emotional one. The rejection by his family becomes more than a historical note—it’s a source of comfort for anyone facing division at home, backed by Matthew 13, Mark 3, and John 7. We also trace “zeal for your house” to the temple cleansing, framing it as a Passover-level purification where Jesus removes the leaven of corruption and restores true worship.

    Then we linger at the cross with the quiet line, “I thirst,” and the sour wine lifted on a hyssop branch. It’s a small detail loaded with meaning, signaling that nothing in God’s plan is accidental or unfinished. Finally, we look ahead to the promise that God will rebuild Zion and establish a kingdom for those who love his name. Loving his name means embracing his life, his suffering, his sacrifice, his resurrection, and his return—and letting that love shape our present obedience. Listen to be strengthened in your faith, sobered by the cost of grace, and renewed in hope for the kingdom that awaits.

    If this conversation stirred your heart, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and leave a review to help more listeners find these studies. What part of Psalm 69 struck you most?

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    12 m
  • God Leads His Dear Children Along
    Nov 24 2025

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    Grief can feel like a closed room, but sometimes it opens into a song. We start with the tender story behind the hymn God Leads Us Along and trace its roots to Psalm 66, where the writer speaks of crushing burdens, fire, and water—and the God who leads through all of it. That lived theology takes shape in the life of evangelist George Young, whose new home was burned to the ground by an enemy, and whose response became a hymn that still steadies hearts a century later.

    From there, we widen the lens. Psalm 67 invites the nations to sing for joy under a Judge who is fair and a Guide who directs peoples. We talk through a biblical timeline that points toward real hope: the church gathered to Christ, global evangelization in the face of darkness, a turning of Israel to the Messiah, and the establishment of a literal kingdom. This isn’t abstract optimism; it’s a map of where history is going, grounded in Scripture and anchored in the character of God.

    Psalm 68 then supplies the power behind the promise. Enemies melt like wax before fire, the fatherless find a home, widows are protected, and the needy are sustained. Mount Zion rises as the future seat of the King, a concrete reminder that God’s care and God’s reign go hand in hand. Along the way, we keep returning to a simple, daily practice: Blessed be the Lord who daily bears us up. Whether you’re on the sunlit heights or in the darkest valley, this conversation pairs honest lament with sturdy hope and invites you to sing while you wait for the King.

    If this encouraged you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope today, and leave a review to help others find the journey.

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    12 m
  • Security and Satisfaction (Psalms 63–65)
    Nov 21 2025

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    Desert thirst meets harvest joy as we walk with David through Psalms 63–65 and explore where real security and satisfaction are found. We start in the wilderness of Judah, where a fugitive king models what to do when life feels sun-baked and brittle: seek God early, name the ache, and let spiritual hunger set the tone for the day. From there we move from the dinner table to the garden, discovering why the soul that clings by faith is upheld by God’s strong right hand—and how timely provision often arrives at the last moment through Scripture, friendships, and unexpected kindness.

    The story shifts to the sting of words in Psalm 64, where tongues become swords and bitter speech flies like poisoned arrows. Rather than absorbing every hit or striking back, we show how refuge in God becomes the wiser path to vindication. It’s a practical, countercultural move: pray first, set wise boundaries, refuse the cycle of retaliation, and trust the Lord to judge justly. Then the landscape opens into the rich farmland of Psalm 65. We celebrate answered prayer, grace that atones, and the river of God that fills furrows, softens ridges, and crowns the year with bounty. The picture isn’t just agricultural poetry—it’s a roadmap for a fruitful life rooted in God’s presence and nourished by obedience.

    Threaded through it all is a simple claim with deep implications: counterfeit pleasures can amuse for a while, but only God can satisfy the heart. Security grows when we lean into His faithfulness; satisfaction deepens when we live under His word. And the joy we taste now is a preview of the feast to come—worship in God’s presence, shared life with the redeemed, and the unending goodness of heaven. If today feels like a desert, there is water ahead. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find The Wisdom Journey. What kind of abundance are you asking God to grow in your life right now?

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    14 m
  • No Other Option but God (Psalms 60–62)
    Nov 20 2025

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    When life pushes past your limits, where do you run first? We walk through Psalms 60–62 to trace David’s journey from defeat to dependence, showing how confession, clear promises, and “God alone” trust rebuild courage when feelings are faint and circumstances refuse to budge.

    We start with the battlefield backdrop of Psalm 60, where an early defeat exposes deeper spiritual fracture. David doesn’t spin the loss; he owns it, prays for restoration, and points to God’s banner—the rallying signal that shows wounded hearts where to find safety and direction. From there we unpack why anchoring to God’s promises outruns the rise and fall of our emotions. If God cannot lie, then forgiveness and hope stand on bedrock, not on the mood of the day. That shift from feelings to promises is not theory; it is survival for a soul that wants to stand again.

    Then we move into Psalm 61’s cry, “Lead me to the rock that is higher than I,” and explore what it means to live on granite instead of clay. Dependence is not weakness; it is wise architecture. Finally, Psalm 62 confronts backup-plan spirituality with a single stubborn word: alone. God alone is our rock, salvation, and fortress—not God plus bank accounts, reports, or reputation. We talk about how “alone” simplifies decisions, quiets panic, and strengthens patience, turning setbacks into stepping stones toward a steadier, braver faith.

    If you’re navigating lingering needs, recurring battles, or a heart that feels faint, this conversation offers a path forward: confess clearly, run to the banner, hold to the promise, and stand on the Rock. Listen now, share it with a friend who needs courage today, and if it helps you, subscribe and leave a review so others can find their footing too.

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    14 m
  • The Hiding Place (Psalms 57–59)
    Nov 19 2025

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    Caves, closets, and courage meet in one sweeping story about refuge that holds when fear refuses to blink. We open with Corrie Ten Boom’s family watch shop in the Netherlands, where a secret room saved hundreds of Jewish neighbors and eventually led Corrie through prison, loss, and a line that still steadies the heart: there is no pit so deep that God is not deeper still. From there, we step into David’s cave at En Gedi and watch an almost unthinkable choice—an easy chance to end Saul’s life—give way to a harder road of restraint and trust.

    Across Psalms 57 to 59, David names the reality most of us would rather outrun: trials are unrelenting, injustice stings, and enemies circle like stray dogs. Yet his prayers turn a corner we need—away from shortcuts and toward the character of God. We talk about imprecatory prayer without flinching, why a world allergic to judgment quietly starves justice, and how the cross lets mercy flow without watering down the standard. David’s language is blunt, but his focus is not on fear; it is on a fortress he can sing about before sunrise.

    This conversation threads Scripture, history, and honest questions into a single claim: refuge is not an escape hatch but a person. When power is misused, when timing feels cruel, when anxiety paces the room, we learn how to cry for justice, wait with integrity, and sing toward morning. Corrie’s testimony and David’s songs converge on a hiding place deeper than the pit, stronger than the pack, and near enough to carry you through the night.

    If this encouraged you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find their way to this conversation.

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

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    13 m
  • The Tear Collector (Psalm 56)
    Nov 18 2025

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    Dark nights have a way of bending our sense of direction. We think we’re level, but the gauges tell another story. We take you to Psalm 56—David’s raw prayer from Gath—where fear doesn’t vanish, yet trust takes the lead. Through the lens of a real aviation tragedy and the metaphor of flying by instruments, we explore why instincts can betray you and how God’s word becomes the steady panel that keeps you from a graveyard spiral.

    We walk through David’s desperate choices, including his risky escape from the hometown of Goliath while carrying the giant’s sword. From there, three anchors rise: God’s word is consistently appropriate for trouble, God is consciously aware of every wandering and sleepless toss, and God is compassionately attentive to each tear. The ancient image of tear bottles comes alive as a tender promise—your sorrow is seen, counted, and kept. Fear and faith can coexist, and that tension is not failure; it’s the place where trust matures.

    Along the way, we trade clichés for concrete practices. Engage Scripture like an instrument panel, especially when visibility drops. Replace gut-driven reactions with rehearsed promises. Name the enemies that lurk—anxiety, cynicism, shame—and counter them with truth spoken aloud. Then lift your eyes to the horizon: a future where God wipes every tear and empty bottles stay empty for good. If you’ve been flying by feel, it’s time to switch on the autopilot of God’s promises and steady your course.

    If this helped level your wings, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s navigating a long night, and leave a review to help others find hope when the lights go out.

    The first of Stephen's two volumes set through the Book of Revelation is now available. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0FQ3XCJMY

    Support the show

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    14 m